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1.
PURPOSE: We aimed at further elucidating the association between quality of life (QOL) and sociodemographic factors, clinical seizure factors, depression and anxiety in drug-resistant temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). METHODS: We studied 106 consecutive adult right-handed patients (mean age 35.4 +/- 9.7; 50% males; IQ> or = 70) with drug-resistant unilateral (59% right) TLE (70% hippocampal sclerosis, 30% tumors or other lesions), who underwent a comprehensive non-invasive pre-surgical protocol. They completed the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and the State Form of the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI). To measure QOL, we used both a generic instrument, the WHOQOL-100, and a disease-specific instrument, the 31-item quality of life in epilepsy (QOLIE-31). Multiple linear regression analysis was used to examine the relationship between each QOL domain and age, gender, education, side of TLE, duration of epilepsy, seizure frequency, and level of depression and anxiety. RESULTS: Severity of depressive symptoms was significantly associated with lower scores across most QOL domains. Depression was consistently the strongest predictor of lower scores on almost all QOL domains. Also, severity of anxiety symptoms was significantly associated with lower scores across many QOL domains. Independent significant relationships between QOL and sociodemographic or clinical epilepsy variables were limited in number and strength. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that QOL in TLE might be substantially affected by the presence and severity of depressive symptoms and, to a lesser degree, of anxiety symptoms. While clinical seizure variables had a weaker association with QOL, the absence of seizure-free patients might have obscured a relation between seizure frequency and QOL. Healthcare professionals should be aware of the significance of patients' emotional state and of the role it plays for their QOL. Adopting a biopsychosocial approach might be useful to address patients' needs.  相似文献   

2.
Wagner JL  Smith G  Ferguson P 《Seizure》2012,21(5):334-339
The aims of this study were to (1) compare caregiver and youth measures of self-efficacy for seizure management (SESM), as well as report of depressive symptoms and suicidal ideation in youth with epilepsy (YWE) and (2) examine the potential relationship between caregiver SESM and caregiver report of depressive symptoms in YWE. Seventy-seven YWE ages 9-17 completed the Children's Depression Inventory (CDI) and the Seizure Self-Efficacy Scale for Children with Epilepsy (SSES-C). Sixty-five caregivers completed the Behavior Assessment System for Children (BASC-II) and the Epilepsy Self-Efficacy Scale (ESES). Results showed no agreement between youth and caregiver self-efficacy scores. However, there was low to modest agreement in published classifications of depressive symptoms between youth and caregiver ratings of depressive symptoms in youth, with caregivers reporting higher levels of symptoms than the youth reported. Twenty-seven percent of YWE endorsed suicidal ideation. When caregiver report of their own self-efficacy towards their child's seizures and their assessment of their child's depressive symptoms were compared, there was a significant inverse relationship. These findings suggest a multi-informant approach to assessment of depressive symptoms in YWE, the importance of including self-efficacy for seizure management in assessment and treatment of YWE, and provide support for transactional patterns of psychosocial adjustment.  相似文献   

3.
Summary: We assessed 77 candidates for epilepsy surgery to determine the association among neuroticism (a dimension of personality characterized by chronic negative emotions and behaviors), psychosocial adjustment as measured by the Washington Psychosocial Seizure Inventory (WPSI), and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) as measured by the Epilepsy Surgery Inventory 55 (ESI-55). Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory 2 (MMPI-2) Neuroticism scale scores were significantly correlated with many domains of patient-perceived psychosocial adjustment and HRQOL regardless of frequency or type of seizures. We then followed 45 of the patients who subsequently underwent epilepsy surgery to determine the influence of neuroticism on postoperative functioning. Two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) indicated that patients with high preoperative neuroticism had significantly poorer postoperative psychosocial adjustment and HRQOL scores than patients who had low or moderate preoperative neuroticism scores. These results support the validity of the MMPI-2 as a useful measure of neuroticism. Preoperative neuroticism has an important influence on postoperative psychosocial adjustment and HRQOL that is independent of postoperative seizure outcome. Understanding the influence of personality variables, such as neuroticism, on psychosocial functioning both before and after epilepsy surgery is essential in managing intractable seizures.  相似文献   

4.
Derry PA  Rose KJ  McLachlan RS 《Epilepsia》2000,41(2):177-185
PURPOSE: Other outcome measures besides seizure control must be considered when assessing the benefit of epilepsy surgery. We investigated the effect of preoperative psychosocial adjustment on postoperative depression in epilepsy patients followed up prospectively for 2 years after temporal lobectomy. METHODS: The Washington Psychosocial Seizure Inventory (WPSI) evaluated psychosocial functioning; the Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) measured depression. Both were completed at baseline and follow-up. RESULTS: Follow-up occurred in 39 temporal lobectomy patients at 2 years after surgery. Greatest improvement in depression scores was limited to patients with good seizure outcomes (seizure free, or marked reduction in seizure frequency), and seizure outcome was a significant predictor of postoperative depression. Despite this, preoperative scores on the emotional adjustment scale of the WPSI were most highly correlated with depression 2 years after surgery. To clarify this relation, moderated hierarchic regression suggested that good preoperative emotional adjustment (WPSI) was generally associated with less depression after surgery. Moreover, poorer preoperative adjustment combined with older age, generalized seizures, the finding of preoperative neurologic deficits, a family history of psychiatric illness, and/or a family history of seizures was related to higher depression scores 2 years after surgery. CONCLUSIONS: Depression after temporal lobectomy is dependent on a complex interaction of variables and can have a significant effect on indices of postoperative adjustment. The WPSI emotional adjustment scale may help to predict which patients are likely to be chronically depressed after surgery.  相似文献   

5.
Cognitive and behavioral impairments are found more often among epileptic children than among their peers. In this study, we evaluated the anxiety and depression in epileptic children to compare their results with that of a healthy control group and to determine the relationship of anxiety and depression scores to epilepsy-related factors. The State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) and Children's Depression Inventory (CDI) were applied to 35 patients with epilepsy aged 9 to 18 years (mean age 12.9 +/- 2.52 years) and to 35 healthy children who served as the control group. Both study and control groups were divided into two age groups (9 to 11 and 12 to 18 years) to exclude the effect of puberty on anxiety and depression scores. Significant depression and suicidal ideation were determined in the study group. The mean trait anxiety score was significantly higher in the 9- to 11-year age group of epileptic patients than the corresponding control group (35.90 +/- 6.90 and 29.33 +/- 2.84, P < .05). The mean state anxiety score (33.90 +/- 3.90 and 30.40 +/- 6.02, P < .05), trait anxiety score (38.20 +/- 6.84 and 32.20 +/- 3.90, P < .05), and depression score (16.65 +/- 8.32 and 8.15 +/- 3.15, P < .05) were significantly higher in the 12- to 18-year age group of epileptic children than in the control group. Among the epilepsy-related factors, whereas epilepsy duration, seizure frequency, and polytherapy were determined to increase anxiety and depression, age of seizure onset, seizure type, and electroencephalographic findings were not related to anxiety and depression. Symptoms of anxiety and depression are common among epileptic children, especially during puberty. The State Trait Anxiety Inventory and Children's Depression Inventory may be used as a tool to provide information to clinicians.  相似文献   

6.
PurposeThis study aimed at finding determinants of quality of life in people with epilepsy (PWE) living in Belgrade, Serbia.MethodIn this study, we recruited consecutive adults with epilepsy attending our outpatient department. Adult patients (age range: 18–65 years) of normal intelligence and without any progressive neurological disease or psychiatric disorder were included in the study. They completed the following questionnaires: QOLIE-31 Inventory (Serbian version), Beck's Depression Inventory-II, Beck's Anxiety Inventory, Symptom Check List-90, and Neurotoxicity Scale-II. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis was performed to assess the predictive effects of some factors on QOLIE-31 Inventory.ResultsThe mean QOLIE-31 score of 203 patients who completed the questionnaires was 70.64 ± 17.74. Sociodemographic factors (age, sex, education, and employment) did not significantly predict QOLIE-31 score. Significant determinants of quality of life were clinical characteristics – seizure severity and etiology of epilepsy – accounting for 30.9% of the variance, depressive and anxiety symptoms accounting for 42.8% of the variance, and cognitive effects of antiepileptic drugs, accounting for 1.5% above other variables.ConclusionsThe results suggest that seizure severity and etiology of epilepsy, depressive and anxiety symptoms, and cognitive adverse medication effects are main determinants of quality of life in this population of PWE.  相似文献   

7.
PURPOSE: The goals of the work described here were to investigate the psychological and social impact of epilepsy on adolescents and to identify to what degree clinical and demographic variables and knowledge of epilepsy could influence psychosocial functioning. METHODS: Seventy adolescents with epilepsy were compared with healthy controls (matched for age, sex, and reading ability) on measures of self-esteem, social adjustment, depression, and obsession. Within the epilepsy group, the impact of seizure frequency, seizure severity, and knowledge of epilepsy on the above measures was also determined. RESULTS: Adolescents with epilepsy showed significantly higher levels of depression, anhedonia, and social anxiety and significantly higher numbers of obsessive symptoms than the adolescents without epilepsy. Among the adolescents with epilepsy, high seizure frequency was significantly associated with low self-esteem, and tonic-clonic seizures were specifically associated with higher levels of depression. Finally, low levels of epilepsy knowledge were significantly associated with higher levels of depression, lower levels of self-esteem, and higher levels of social anxiety. CONCLUSIONS: Epilepsy has a significant psychosocial impact on adolescents at this difficult time of life. Social support and access to appropriate information about epilepsy could be of help.  相似文献   

8.
Epilepsy is known to be associated with multiple psychiatric comorbidities, such as depression, sleep-disorders, and anxiety. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence and impact of affective symptoms over health-related quality of life (QOL) in Mexican people with epilepsy (PWE). We performed a cross-sectional observational study on 73 consecutive PWE and corresponding age- and sex-matched controls. HrQOL was assessed using the QOLIE-10 (QOL in Epilepsy-10) instrument. Clinical and demographic characteristics were recorded, and instruments evaluating depressive/anxiety symptoms, sleep quality, and insomnia were completed. PWE had more depressive/anxiety symptoms when compared with controls. QOLIE-10 scores were significantly inversely correlated with poor sleep quality, insomnia symptoms, depressive/anxiety symptoms, and number of anti-epileptic drugs used, but not with seizure type or number of seizures per month. A poor QOL was independently associated only with anti-epileptic drug polytherapy. PWE are burdened with depressive/anxiety symptoms at alarming rates. The presence of depressive symptoms along with sleep disturbances and more significantly, anti-epileptic drug polytherapy, appears to negatively impact QOL, to a greater degree than short-term seizure control.  相似文献   

9.
People with epilepsy have a higher risk for suicide than people without epilepsy. The relationship between seizure control and suicide is controversial. A standardized protocol to record history, diagnostic testing, and neuropsychiatric assessments was administered. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) were administered presurgically and yearly for up to 5 years. Among the 396 enrolled, 4 of 27 deaths were attributed to suicide. The standardized mortality ratio, compared with suicides in the U.S. population and adjusted for age and gender, was 13.3 (95% CI=3.6-34.0). Only one patient had a BDI score suggestive of severe depression (BDI=33), one had depressive symptoms that did not the meet the depressive range (BDI=7), and the other two reported no depressive symptoms. Two of the patients reported moderate to severe anxiety symptoms (BAI=17 and 21, respectively). Suicide may occur after epilepsy surgery, even when patients report excellent seizure control.  相似文献   

10.
PURPOSE: To verify the emotional components expressed by the relatives of adult patients with a diagnosis of epilepsy, and whether they are related to adjustment to the illness and the course of the illness over time. METHODS: We studied a consecutive sample of 43 outpatients suffering from epilepsy and 43 key relatives using the Camberwell Family Interview (CFI), with the expressed emotion (EE) of the relatives being rated at baseline (T0). EE refers to a construct representing some key aspects of interpersonal relationships: the relatives were assigned to the high-EE group if they scored 3 or more on the emotional over involvement (EOI) scale, or showed hostility, or made 6 or more critical comments. The patients were clinically evaluated at baseline and for 1 year of appropriate treatment by an epileptologist who was blinded to the EE ratings. They also completed STAI XI, STAI X2 and Beck's Depression Inventory at baseline. RESULTS: Twenty-six relatives (60%) were rated as showing a high degree of EE. In the 12-month follow-up study, high EE and high EOI were found to be associated with a significantly higher seizure frequency than that recorded for the patients living in low-EE households (p<0.05). The patients from households assessed as reflecting a high degree of criticism showed poor drug compliance (p<0.01), whereas those with relatives assessed as having a high degree of warmth showed better clinical and pharmacological compliance (p<0.01). High family criticism scores also correlated with higher study entry levels of depression (p<0.05) and trait and state anxiety (p<0.05) among the patients. CONCLUSIONS: The study findings highlight the impact of particular components of the family emotional climate on the clinical course and psychological adjustment of patients with epilepsy.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: The aims of this study were to investigate the stability of depressive symptoms over time, explore possible reasons for the genesis of depressive symptoms, examine psychosocial adjustment over time and examine the effects of the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in a group of HIV infected patients. METHOD: HIV seropositive outpatients were assessed at 6 monthly intervals over a 2-year period. At each assessment patients completed the Beck Depression Inventory, the Life Event Inventory, the Core Bereavement Item questionnaire and the Psychosocial Adjustment to Illness Scale. Details regarding HIV illness progression and antiretroviral treatment were recorded for each follow-up assessment. RESULTS: One hundred and sixty-three patients completed the baseline assessment and proceeded to the 2-year follow-up study. Most patients remained well over the 2-year follow-up period; mean CD4 count for the group increased over the study period. Ten patients developed AIDS and 18 patients died. Antiretroviral medications changed significantly during the follow-up, with most patients changing to combination (triple) therapy, which included the use of a protease inhibitor. Psychosocial stressors (life event distress and number of bereavements) reduced as the study progressed. Reported depressive symptoms decreased over time and psychosocial adjustment to illness tended to improve over the 2-year period. CONCLUSIONS: Over a 2-year follow-up period HIV/AIDS symptoms and illness markers and psychosocial adjustment to illness improved, psychological stressors and depressive symptoms decreased, with a temporal relationship to changes in antiretroviral therapy.  相似文献   

12.
Wrench J  Wilson SJ  Bladin PF 《Epilepsia》2004,45(5):534-543
PURPOSE: Mood disturbance is a common comorbid condition of temporal lobe epilepsy before and after seizure surgery. Few studies have examined mood disturbance in patients undergoing resections outside the temporal lobe (extratemporal resections). This study aimed to compare the early, postoperative evolution of mood disturbance in temporal and extratemporal lobe epilepsy patients to examine the effect of site of surgical resection on mood outcome. METHODS: The study used a longitudinal design and was qualitative in nature. Sixty seizure surgery patients (43 temporal resections, 17 extratemporal resections) were assessed before surgery and at discharge, 1 month, and 3 months after surgery, by using the Austin CEP Interview. Psychosocial adjustment, psychiatric difficulties, including depression and anxiety, and seizure frequency were assessed. RESULTS: Before surgery, both temporal and extratemporal patients had significant psychiatric histories with similarly high rates of depression (33 and 53%, respectively) and anxiety (23 and 18%, respectively). After surgery, significantly more temporal patients were seizure free at each of the reviews compared with extratemporal patients. Temporal patients also reported significantly higher levels of depression (26%), anxiety (42%), and psychosocial adjustment difficulties (64%) at the 1-month review than did extratemporal patients. Mood disturbance was significantly associated with adjustment difficulties in both groups, but was not related to seizure outcome at any review period. CONCLUSIONS: A general increase in mood disturbance was evident after surgery, particularly in temporal resection patients at the 1-month review. Site of surgery and psychosocial adjustment showed significant associations with postoperative mood disturbance, supporting the role of both neurobiological and psychosocial factors in mood outcome.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVE: Children with epilepsy have high rates of depression and anxiety. The majority of studies concentrate on the children with epilepsy, but the emotional impact of epilepsy on family members is of clinical concern. In this cross-sectional study we aimed to examine the association between epilepsy in childhood and adolescence, and anxiety and depression in these patients and their mothers. METHODS: We studied 35 children and adolescents with seizures (age range, 7-19 years), 35 gender-matched healthy controls (age range, 8-17) who did not have any chronic medical illness, and mothers of these individuals (n=70) in a cross-sectional analysis. We administered the Kovac Child Depression Inventory (CDI) and State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children (STAIc) to the children. We administered the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) to the mothers of these children. Pearson correlations were used to analyze dependence between variables, and Student's t test was used to compare mean values between test scores. RESULTS: Patients with epilepsy had higher CDI scores (mean+/-SD, 12.48+/-6.35) than controls (9.31+/-5.11) (P<0.05), whereas the STAIc scores did not differ between cases (34.03+/-8.29) and controls (35.20+/-6.23) (P<0.05). Mothers of children with epilepsy did not have more depression or anxiety symptoms than mothers of children without epilepsy as measured by BDI and STAI scores (P>0.05). There was no correlation between mothers' scores and patients' or controls' scores. CONCLUSIONS: These results support findings from previous studies that children and adolescents with epilepsy have a higher frequency of depressive but not anxiety symptoms than the general population of healthy children and that this is independent of their mothers' symptoms.  相似文献   

14.
Different factors have been related with interictal anxiety, reported in 10%–25% of patients with epilepsy. We determined the frequency of interictal anxiety in 196 patients with active epilepsy in a cross-sectional survey to know which symptoms of anxiety were most frequently reported in patients with epilepsy and to analyze the factors associated with their presence. Patients were assessed with the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), and the Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAMA). Data were analyzed with a logistic regression model. The HAMA ratings revealed that 38.8% experienced significant anxiety symptoms, as defined by a rating above 18 points. Use of primidone, depression, cryptogenic, and posttraumatic etiologies significantly predicted anxiety after logistic regression. Symptoms related to higher scores on HAMA were anxious mood, tension, insomnia, intellectual function, depressed mood, cardiovascular and genitourinary symptoms. Further studies should be performed to define the role of psychosocial factors in the development and evolution of anxiety among these patients.  相似文献   

15.
PURPOSE: To investigate possible predictive factors for seizure control in a group of children and adults with low IQs (IQ, < or =70) who underwent resective surgery for intractable focal epilepsy and to study outcome with respect to seizures and neuropsychological functioning. We also studied psychosocial outcome in the adult patients. METHODS: Thirty-one patients (eight children younger than 18 years) with a Wechsler Full Scale IQ of 70 or less underwent comprehensive neuropsychological assessments before and 2 years after surgery. Adults also completed the Washington Psychosocial Seizure Inventory (WPSI). Univariate analyses were used to identify variables differentiating between patients who became seizure free and those who did not. Pre- and postoperative test results were compared by t test for dependent samples. RESULTS: Forty-eight percent of the patients became seizure free, 52% of those with temporal lobe resection and 38% of those with extratemporal resection. Only one variable was predictive for seizure outcome: duration of epilepsy. In one third of the patients, who had the shortest duration of epilepsy (<12 years), 80% became seizure free. Significant improvement was seen regarding vocational adjustment in adults (WPSI). Seizure-free adults improved their Full Scale IQ scores. No cognitive changes were found in seizure-free children or in patients who did not become seizure free. CONCLUSIONS: A good seizure outcome was obtained after resective surgery in patients with intractable focal epilepsy and low IQ, provided that treatment was done relatively shortly after onset of epilepsy. No adverse effects were seen on cognitive and psychosocial functioning.  相似文献   

16.
Depression and anxiety before and after temporal lobe epilepsy surgery.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
PURPOSE: To examine the course of depression and anxiety in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) treated with epilepsy surgery (and anticonvulsant drugs) or medical means alone. METHODS: Of 94 TLE patients evaluated for epilepsy surgery, 76 underwent a resective procedure, 18 continued on medical treatment alone. Depression (Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)) and anxiety scores (Self-Rating Anxiety Scale (SRAS)) were examined during presurgical evaluation (T1) and after a mean of 16 months (T2), or 12 months after surgery. Depression and anxiety scores were related to type of intervention, underlying epileptogenic lesion, change of seizure control and anticonvulsant therapy. RESULTS: At T1, depression and anxiety scores were higher in patients with TLE than scores in published normal populations. At T2, depression but not anxiety scores were significantly lower than at T1. Change of depression scores interacted with improvements of seizure control. CONCLUSIONS: Evidence of depression and anxiety is commonly found in patients with TLE. Depression improves not because of epilepsy surgery per se, but because of improved seizure control. This is more commonly achieved by surgery than medical treatment. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that depression in TLE is caused by pathological epileptic activity rather than a fixed structural defect.  相似文献   

17.
PURPOSE: Depression sometimes occurs after surgical treatment for medically intractable partial epilepsy. The risk of pre- and postsurgical depression may vary by laterality of seizure focus. We reviewed the pre- and postsurgical psychological assessments and clinical courses of patients to identify those at highest risk for postsurgical mood disorders. METHODS: Depression status was assessed in a consecutive series of epilepsy patients before and 1 year after epilepsy surgery with the use of Scale 2 of the MMPI-2 and a clinical depression index (CDI) scoring the occurrence of depressive symptoms, psychiatric referral, or attempted/completed suicide. Outcome at 1 year was modeled by regression techniques as functions of preoperative mood measurements, side of epilepsy surgery, and preoperative verbal intelligence. RESULTS: The CDI and Scale 2 MMPI-2 correlated significantly (r = 0.341; p < or = 0.01). Left (n = 54 subjects) and right (n = 53) surgery groups did not differ by sex, seizure outcome, age, education, age at first seizure, duration of epilepsy, or intellect. Higher presurgical depressive morbidity (p = 0.0037) and right-sided surgery (p = 0.0003) predicted higher postoperative CDI. Higher preoperative Scale 2 scores, indicating worse depressive traits, predicted worse postoperative Scale 2 scores (p < 0.0001). Although side of surgery did not predict Scale 2 scores, Scale 2 scores of patients with preoperative right-sided foci tended to have worse postsurgical Scale 2 scores (p = 0.08). Findings for the temporal lobectomy subgroup (n = 90) were similar to those of the overall sample. CONCLUSIONS: Patients undergoing right hemispheric epilepsy surgery, especially those with high presurgical depression-related morbidity, may be particularly susceptible to clinical depression. Our findings support other studies that show an interhemispheric modulation of depressive traits and symptoms.  相似文献   

18.
Objective This study examined how state and trait anxiety of adolescents with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are associated with their demographic characteristics, repetitive and restricted behaviors (RRBs), and internalizing and externalizing problem behaviors. Methods A total of 96 participants with ASD (mean age=14.30 years; 91 males) completed a battery of tests including the State/Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised, the Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS), and a cognitive test measuring intelligence quotient (IQ). Participants’ parents completed the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL). Pearson’s correlations among age, IQ, two subscales of the STAI (i.e., STAIS and STAIT, measuring self-reported state and trait anxiety, respectively), and the Anxiety subscale of CBCL (i.e., CBCL-Anxiety, measuring parent-reported trait anxiety) were computed. Subsequently, Pearson’s correlations were computed among the three anxiety measures, RRBs, and problem behaviors, while controlling for participants’ age and IQ. Results The STAIS and CBCL-Anxiety were both significantly correlated with higher age, sensory sensitivity, depressive symptoms, somatic complaints, and aggressive behaviors. All three anxiety variables were significantly and positively correlated with total SRS RRB scores. Additionally, the STAIS and STAIT were significantly associated with more severe Compulsion/Adherence behaviors, and the CBCL-Anxiety was also significantly associated with more severe Rule-breaking Behaviors. Conclusion Self-reported state anxiety showed association patterns similar to those of parent-reported trait anxiety. Future studies investigating the precise operationalization of different anxiety instruments are needed to accurately measure the anxiety of adolescents with ASD.  相似文献   

19.
Depression and anxiety have been reported in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and in patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS). However, the precise mechanisms that lead to depressive and anxiety symptoms in these patients are still unclear. In this study we evaluated with the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) patients with MS and CIS and compared them to controls. We also correlated BDI and BAI scores with clinical parameters. Kruskall-Wallis followed by Dunn's Multiple Comparison Test, Chi-square and Spearman test were used. Patients with MS had higher depressive and anxiety scores than controls. The BDI and BAI scores of patients with CIS were not significantly different from controls. There was a positive correlation between BDI, BAI and EDSS. Our results corroborate the view that MS patients have higher depression and anxiety levels than control subjects. Anxiety and depressive symptoms also seem to progress according to the severity of the disease.  相似文献   

20.
PURPOSE: Risk of depression, anxiety, and reduced quality of life is elevated in epilepsy patients, due to a range of factors including aetiology, structural brain lesions, seizure worry, epilepsy surgery, hereditary factors, psychosocial factors, and possible adverse effects of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). Studies on the relationships between epilepsy-related variables and behavioural adjustment have been mainly conducted on patients with persisting seizures, whereas the present study investigated behavioural function in epilepsy patients seizure-free for more than 2 years on monotherapy. METHODS: Adults with epilepsy on AED monotherapy and without epileptic seizures for at least 2 years (n=126) were assessed with the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2 (MMPI-2), in addition to MRI and EEG. RESULTS: Group analysis found mean MMPI-2 scores on all the clinical and content scales to be within the normal range. Abnormally elevated scores on scales measuring aspects of depression, health-related concerns, low self-esteem, negative treatment indicators, and physical complaints were recorded in a higher proportion of patients than would normally be expected. Multiple regression analysis showed that MRI pathology was a significant predictor for an abnormally poor score on the low self-esteem scale, and that epilepsy onset 相似文献   

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